Combinatorial control of Arabidopsis proline dehydrogenase transcription by specific heterodimerisation of bZIP transcription factors

2006 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

Jump to: Cite & Linked | Documents & Media | Details | Version history

Cite this publication

​Combinatorial control of Arabidopsis proline dehydrogenase transcription by specific heterodimerisation of bZIP transcription factors​
Weltmeier, F.; Ehlert, A.; Mayer, C. S.; Dietrich, K.; Wang, X.; Schuetze, K. & Alonso, R. et al.​ (2006) 
The EMBO Journal25(13) pp. 3133​-3143​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.emboj.7601206 

Documents & Media

License

GRO License GRO License

Details

Authors
Weltmeier, Fridtjof; Ehlert, Andrea; Mayer, Caroline S.; Dietrich, Katrin; Wang, X.; Schuetze, Katia; Alonso, Rosario; Harter, Klaus; Vicente-Carbajosa, Jesus; Droege-Laser, Wolfgang
Abstract
Proline metabolism has been implicated in plant responses to abiotic stresses. The Arabidopsis thaliana proline dehydrogenase (ProDH) is catalysing the first step in proline degradation. Transcriptional activation of ProDH by hypo-osmolarity is mediated by an ACTCAT cis element, a typical binding site of basic leucine zipper (bZIP) transcription factors. In this study, we demonstrate by gain-of-function and loss-of-function approaches, as well as chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP), that ProDH is a direct target gene of the group-S bZIP factor AtbZIP53. Dimerisation studies making use of yeast and Arabidopsis protoplast-based two-hybrid systems, as well as bimolecular fluorescence complementation (BiFC) reveal that AtbZIP53 does not preferentially form dimers with group-S bZIPs but strongly interacts with members of group-C. In particular, a synergistic interplay of AtbZIP53 and group-C AtbZIP10 was demonstrated by colocalisation studies, strong enhancement of ACTCAT-mediated transcription as well as complementation studies in atbzip53 atbzip10 T-DNA insertion lines. Heterodimer mediated activation of transcription has been found to operate independent of the DNA-binding properties and is described as a crucial mechanism to modulate transcription factor activity and function.
Issue Date
2006
Status
published
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Journal
The EMBO Journal 
ISSN
0261-4189

Reference

Citations


Social Media